Category Archives: Culture

Love, Life and Children

It is amazing how many of our couples have had children in the last year or are expecting! The list just keeps on growing as their families are expanding! It’s great to take full advantage of your marriage :-) Just yesterday we got an email from one of our favorite couples who got married March 3, 2007 – they had their first child and are working on the nursery.

One of our most exiting babies is Konstandinos, who was baptized just 1 year after his parents’ wedding! Check this out:

Here was the wedding video, May 11, 2008:

Here was their son’s baptism video, May 17, 2009:

Konstandino’s Baptism from Charles Lauren Films on Vimeo.

Amazing and keep up the good work!!

Masters of Dance Seminar in Long Beach

Click the image to watch!!

Last year David made this episode of Beach Time for Cal State Long Beach. The Beach Time Crew spent a day learning techniques from some of the hottest dancers and choreographers in the entertainment industry at the Masters of Dance Seminar held in The Pyramid at California State University Long Beach in May of 2009.

How would you like to spend a day learning dance techniques from some of the hottest dancers and choreographers in the entertainment industry today? Then sign up for the Masters of Dance Seminar in the Walter Pyramid at Cal State Long Beach on Saturday May 10th. Be inspired by remarks from Carrie Ann Inaba, a judge on ABC’s hit TV show Dancing with the Stars. To Register —http://www.modsuniversity.com

R-Mine Bridal Party Video

We had a great time, thanks to Amirah for inviting us!

R-Mine Bridal Marchesa Collection from Charles Lauren Films on Vimeo.

r-mine bridal Marchesa Collection Launch Party

R-Mine Bridal is a wonderful company and their party in November was insane! There was so much to see and so much to do, this one will be just as informative! rsvp: events@rminebridal.com

From Forbes: The Worst Jobs for the 21st Century

Health care, education and financial services–if you’re looking for work in the coming decades, these are the fields to get into.

What to avoid? The usual suspects. According to the projections by the U.S. government, manufacturing jobs are expected to decline by more than 5% by 2014 as production moves overseas. Same goes for textile workers, such as sewing machine operators, who will see a 36% drop in employment. Technology will kill off more office positions, such as file clerks. They’ll see a 36% drop in their ranks by 2014. Digital cameras will zap the manual photo processing industry by about 30%. And that guy who comes around to read your electric meter? Expect to see a lot less of him, too.

But these are the obvious victims as the U.S. moves from a goods-producing economy to a services-producing economy. More interesting are the jobs that are likely to experience slower than average growth (average being about 13%). This is where the surprises are.

In Pictures: The Worst Jobs For The 21st Century

Like computer programmers. Despite all the advances–and expected job growth–in the computer industry, expect the number of programmers to increase by about 2% between 2004-2014. Why? Outsourcing. Americans who want a career in this field should find a specialization, like cybersecurity.

Another endangered species: journalists. Despite the proliferation of media outlets, newspapers, where the bulk of U.S. reporters work, will cut costs and jobs as the Internet replaces print. While current events will always need to be covered (we hope), the number of reporting positions is expected to grow by just 5% in the coming decade, the Labor Department says. Most jobs will be in small (read: low-paying) markets.

Radio announcers will have a tough time, too. Station consolidation, advances in technology and a barren landscape for new radio stations will contribute to a 5% reduction in employment for announcers by the middle of the next decade. Even satellite radio doesn’t seem immune from the changes. The two major companies, XM and Sirius–which now have plans to merge–have regularly operated in the red.

Anyone who regularly books their flights online can tell you why the travel agent business is in jeopardy. So here’s a surprise: The Department of Labor only predicts a 6% drop in travel agent jobs by 2014. The demand for luxury and specialty travel, and increased spending on tourism, will buoy the industry somewhat. If you do plan to be a travel agent, best to find a niche field or specialize in specific-destination trips. Travel agents might also find success in organizing groups of foreign visitors to their home markets. But remember, the travel industry is highly connected to swings in economic conditions.

Worse off? Federal employees and their amazing benefits. Washington employs nearly 2 million people, not including the military, making it the country’s largest employer. After Sept. 11, 2001, it expanded significantly due to homeland security needs. But those days may be coming to an end. By 2014, federal government jobs–excluding the Postal Service– will only have increased by about 1.6% above 2004 levels due to the transfer of some jobs to state and local governments and the increased use of private contracting companies. Don’t believe it? A report compiled by a House of Representatives panel earlier this year found that government spending on contracts rose by 103% between 2000 and 2005.

Should you be discouraged if a career you pinned your hopes on is not expected to grow? Not at all, says Anthony Spadafore, director of Pathfinders, a career counseling company in Alexandria, Va. He says that if people pursue their fields that play to their talents, they’ll be able to compete for the top jobs where competition is fierce, even if the industry is diminishing.

“The idea of shrinking and hot fields, we think it’s sort of a rudimentary way of looking at things,” Spadafore says. “Believe it or not, there’s still a need for bank tellers.”

In Pictures: The Worst Jobs For The 21st Century

Want more info? The Department of Labor has some excellent information, including the bi-annual Occupational Outlook Handbook, which includes career descriptions, salary information, employment projections and working conditions for hundreds of jobs. (The next version is due out early next year.) Another good resource is the Occupational Outlook Quarterly, which profiles specific careers. Last year, the publication issued an entire volume related to growth projections.

The Band RamFunkshus

This was one of the best bands we’ve ever heard or seen at a wedding! They are called RamFunkshus and the woman singing Stand By Me is named Sean Wiggins!

The Band RamFunkshus from Charles Lauren Films on Vimeo.

The World in 2010

This is a link to a book written in 1974 about what life would be like in 2010:

http://2010book.tumblr.com/post/310745454/cover

The year is 2010

“It is seven o’clock,” says an alarm clock hidden in the wall. Suddenly the room is filled with the sound of music. Time to get up—off the floor.

In the year 2010 you do not sleep on a bed. There are no beds, no tables, no chairs. (That would hurt) The floor is made for sitting, sleeping, and walking on. It is soft where you sit or sleep, hard where you need a table or desk.

Your home is very carefully planned.

No family lives in a house or apartment too large or too small for them. Every room has several uses. (Just about in our house!) The bedroom is also an office, and the kitchen is a living room. In 2010 there must be no wasted space. There are so many people in the world that every inch of ground must be used wisely.

In your tiny bathroom there is no tub, just a shower. (That’s no fun, I like baths!) The shower makes it very easy to keep yourself clean. There are no faucets for hot and cold water, no soap to slither out of your fingers, no need for towels.

You just set the dial for the water temperature and step in. (Totally useful!)

Water pours down from small jets in the ceiling.

Then foaming water flows over you. More water rinses you. Finally, a blast of warm air (if I lived under a blow dryer) comes from vents in the side of the shower to dry you.

Now you are ready to put your clothes on.

In the year 2010 everyone wears a jumpsuit and shoes. The clothes may look odd, but they are sensible. (I don’t think that would ever happen – Kelsey needs her shoes no matter what decade!) The jumpsuits and shoes are made in thousands of colors, from a material so light you can hardly feel it. The material keeps you warm when it is cold and cool when it is hot.

…You can see how fun this is – click on the link to keep reading the predictions!

The Untied States of Wedding Music 2009

We just saw this great video from DJ Earworm – using pretty much every dance song that we have heard at receptions all year long! Keeping everyone happy and dancing while economic challenges hung in the misty background of everything that happened this year – it was a perfect place for these kinds of songs.

For Those Newly Engaged – Have a joyful Christmas!!

Korean First Birthday (Dol)

Korean First Birthday (Dol) from Charles Lauren Films on Vimeo.

This is a fun look at torturing little children! In a good way! ;-) Jonah celebrates his first birthday Korean style and we got to be a part of it! They had it at the awesome restaurant called YongSuSan in Koreatown and it was a blast!